Secular Choirs
- "An den erwünschten Frieden im Jahr 1814" for choir and orchestra (1814)
- "An die Religion" for choir a cappella (1814)
- "Bei Gelegenheit des Friedens" for soprano solo, tenor, bass and orchestra (1800)
- "Beide reichen Dir die Hand" for choir - fragment -
- "Del redentore lo scempio" for choir and orchestra (ca. 1805)
- "Der Vorsicht Gunst beschütze, beglücktes Österreich, dich" for choir and orchestra (1813) - new version of the final movement of "Der Tyroler Landsturm" (1799) -
- "Dio serva Francesco" for choir and orchestra
- "Do re mi fa" for choir a cappella (1818)
- "Es schallen die Töne" for choir and orchestra
- "Herzliche Empfindung bey dem so lange ersehnten und nun hergestellten Frieden im Jahr 1814" for choir and orchestra (1814)
- "O Friede, reich am Heil des Herrn" - see: "Herzliche Empfindung bey dem so lange ersehnten und nun hergestellten Frieden im Jahr 1814" -
- "Hinab in den Schoß der Amphitrite" for choir and orchestra (from "Danaus"?)
- "Il piacer la gioia" for choir and orchestra
- "Ogni bosco, ogni pendice" for choir and orchestra
- "Religion, Du Himmelstochter" - see: "An die Religion" -
- "Schweb herab, o holder Seraph Friede" - see: "An den erwünschten Frieden im Jahr 1814" -
- "Schwer lag auf unserem Vaterlande" - see: "Rückerinnerung der Deutschen nell'anno 1813" -
- "Rückerinnerung der Deutschen nell'anno 1813" for choir and orchestra (1813/14)
- Songs, ensembles and canons with or without piano - ca. 340 works -
Read more about this topic: List Of Compositions By Antonio Salieri
Famous quotes containing the words secular and/or choirs:
“but as an Eagle
His cloudless thunderbolted on thir heads.
So vertue givn for lost,
Deprest, and overthrown, as seemd,
Like that self-begottn bird
In the Arabian woods embost,
That no second knows nor third,
And lay ere while a Holocaust,
From out her ashie womb now teemd
Revives, reflourishes, then vigorous most
When most unactive deemd,
And though her body die, her fame survives,
A secular bird ages of lives.”
—John Milton (16081674)
“A mans growth is seen in the successive choirs of his friends. For every friend whom he loses for truth, he gains a better.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)